3D Mars Scenes Recreated From Photos 24
Hoon Mihn Fao links to this BBC article about Microsoft Research scientists generating 3D models based on pictures beamed back from the Mars rovers. It begins "Using techniques originally applied to paintings, the researchers have written software that works out what flat images would look like from different viewpoints. The result is a navigable 3D model created from one or more pictures snapped by the Mars buggies."
Am I the only one who's thinking... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Am I the only one who's thinking... (Score:2, Insightful)
A desert is a collection of sandy hills with an occasional cactus and Mars even lacks the latter.
And there aren't any pictures of the secret Nazi Mars base, but don't worry, we've send our best Castle Wolfenstein player to deal with it.
Mars in Stereo (Score:5, Interesting)
More Mars stereo goodness... (Score:3, Informative)
If you've got your red/blue glasses you can see them here [nnin.net]. We update them with new images every morning. Some of the images are useless but there are also a bunch that NASA never generates for us. They are separated by rover and Sol.
Where's the video? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Where's the video? (Score:5, Informative)
Pictures and Videos [microsoft.com]
Have fun...
Re:Where's the video? (Score:1)
Are they interpolating between two cameras? (Score:3, Informative)
This sort of thing isn't new. Panorama Tools [unimelb.edu.au] has PTInterpolate, which given two images of the same scene taken from different viewpoints creates any intermediate view. I've never tried it but this makes me want to.
Re:Are they interpolating between two cameras? (Score:1)
Re:Are they interpolating between two cameras? (Score:1)
Re:Where's the video? (Score:3, Interesting)
I don't think they do. You can calculate the position of most objects actually imaged in images taken from multiple viewpoints of the same scene using a modern version of old-fashioned triangulation like surveyers use, but you still have no idea what is behind a rock, for example. At best one can guess what the back looks like based on the front (if back not imaged).
But I notice in some of the 3D models used by the Mars teams that "unknown" areas are filled in
NASA did this from day one (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:NASA did this from day one (Score:3, Insightful)
Paul
Re:NASA did this from day one (Score:5, Informative)
Grandparent said:
Parent said:
Try understanding what you read. :) Making a stereoscopic view from a single image is a step backwards. They're interpolating to "resolve" information that doesn't really exist. It's like when crime dramas zoom in about 10x and then magically clean up the image to see details that were not captured on a security camera! If you want to extract depth, you need two pictures taken from separate locations. Otherwise you're just making educated guesses.
Please don't tell me you honestly think you can tell that w is in front of Y just by processing the picture from camera A (unless you know the exact dimensions of the WXYZ elements). You need the additional information provided by camera B. Consider a picture where you see a tall person and a short building. You might assume the person is standing in front of the building, but what if it's a miniature building in the foreground? Unless you have a 2nd picture, you can't know for sure.
Re:NASA did this from day one (Score:2)
Try reading my post. It is a step backwards to take a single image and generate fake data from it, when we already have real data from multiple stereo images!
Re:NASA did this from day one (Score:2, Informative)
What is non-trivial is generating a stereogram from a single image. In some circumstances only a single image is available and another will never become available. Are you seriously claiming that it's a step backwards to be able to generate a stereogram from a single image?
The research was first applied (AFAIK) to Renaissance oil painti
Other uses? (Score:4, Funny)
Would this technique work, for, say, objects hidden or obscured by some sort of flimsy semi-transparent thin fibrous material? Or only hard, rock-like substances? ^^
Re:Other uses? (Score:1)
That's where the little green men come from!
Re:Other uses? (Score:1)
IOW, hope you like dick.
Better Format? (Score:1)
Both Video Lan Client, and Mplayer refuse to play this thing.
FFMPEG doesn't support it yet, I don't think.
I'm becoming convinced that the only reason "WMV3" encoding exists is to lock out non-M$ users. There are a million different formats that work well enough and are open.
What else should one expect from M$?
Links are:
http://research.microsoft.com/~antcrim/mars _ web_MS RC/MarsVirtualView.wmv
http://research.microsoft. com/~antcrim/mars_web_MS RC/MSR
Re:Better Format? (Score:1)
http://research.microsoft.com/~antcrim/mars_web